"Your publication" (7/220/22020) followed the continuous interaction of the Renaissance Dam issue in Egypt after the statements of the Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation Mohamed Abdel-Ati regarding negotiations with Ethiopia, and how Cairo did not agree on the legal frameworks to fill the dam, indicating - in a shocking statement - to The negotiations in 2011 were on a completely different dam than the Renaissance Dam.

These statements sparked controversy and mockery among a number of tweeters, while others saw that it confirms that the Egyptian government was involved in negotiations from the beginning in an attempt not to waste the Egyptian share of the Nile water.

Activist Osama Rushdi wrote, "When the dictator decides to bypass experts and institutions and receive advice from parties who have interests in building # Al-Nahda Dam, it is natural that he sign a take-away agreement that brings to his country the misfortunes that will not be forgiven, and since there are no institutions of accountability or justice that rule, the tyrant will be held responsible for failure On any jungle. "

Tik Tok war

On the other hand, the debates over the Renaissance Dam and the waters of the Nile have reached the application of Tik Tok, transforming it into a war between Ethiopian and Egyptian users that started with a video of an Ethiopian girl explaining how Ethiopia will divide the waters of the Nile from its point of view, without giving Egypt anything from it.

Activists traded cute comments about this war raging in cyberspace. Tweet Walid Fawaz wrote, "Provocative videos spread recently from some individuals in the Ethiopian state coinciding with the file of the Renaissance Dam. There must be a dialogue of the mind and reduce the gaps between the two peoples and we are not involved in similar videos. The strong one who owns himself in anger we are riding the mind to the end, and may God suffice you The evil of the sane wrath. "

"There is a fierce Cuban war with Ethiopia fought over Tik Tok and we know nothing about it," Mohamed al-Shimi tweeted.

As for Marwan Al-Qalamoush, he said, "I think Ethiopia will save the water on Tik Tok videos," while Salah Abanoub wrote, "The war between Egypt and Ethiopia erupted on Tik Tok."